| Literature DB >> 28603700 |
Anna M Lasica1,2, Miroslaw Ksiazek1,3, Mariusz Madej3, Jan Potempa1,3.
Abstract
Protein secretion systems are vital for prokaryotic life, as they enable bacteria to acquire nutrients, communicate with other species, defend against biological and chemical agents, and facilitate disease through the delivery of virulence factors. In this review, we will focus on the recently discovered type IX secretion system (T9SS), a complex translocon found only in some species of the Bacteroidetes phylum. T9SS plays two roles, depending on the lifestyle of the bacteria. It provides either a means of movement (called gliding motility) for peace-loving environmental bacteria or a weapon for pathogens. The best-studied members of these two groups are Flavobacterium johnsoniae, a commensal microorganism often found in water and soil, and Porphyromonas gingivalis, a human oral pathogen that is a major causative agent of periodontitis. In P. gingivalis and some other periodontopathogens, T9SS translocates proteins, especially virulence factors, across the outer membrane (OM). Proteins destined for secretion bear a conserved C-terminal domain (CTD) that directs the cargo to the OM translocon. At least 18 proteins are involved in this still enigmatic process, with some engaged in the post-translational modification of T9SS cargo proteins. Upon translocation across the OM, the CTD is removed by a protease with sortase-like activity and an anionic LPS is attached to the newly formed C-terminus. As a result, a cargo protein could be secreted into the extracellular milieu or covalently attached to the bacterial surface. T9SS is regulated by a two-component system; however, the precise environmental signal that triggers it has not been identified. Exploring unknown systems contributing to bacterial virulence is exciting, as it may eventually lead to new therapeutic strategies. During the past decade, the major components of T9SS were identified, as well as hints suggesting the possible mechanism of action. In addition, the list of characterized cargo proteins is constantly growing. The actual structure of the translocon, situated in the OM of bacteria, remains the least explored area; however, new technical approaches and increasing scientific attention have resulted in a growing body of data. Therefore, we present a compact up-to-date review of this topic.Entities:
Keywords: Porphyromonas gingivalis; T9SS; gliding motility; pathogenesis; proteins; secretion; virulence
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28603700 PMCID: PMC5445135 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2017.00215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1Pigmentation of various The wild-type P. gingivalis W83 and ATCC33277 strains grown anaerobically on blood agar plates present brown/black pigmentation due to heme accumulation. This phenotype is in a great part dependent on Kgp gingipain activity on the cell surface. P. gingivalis strains deficient in Kgp activity yield beige colonies which darken over the time. Arginine gingipains (RgpA/B) are not involved in this process and their deletion does not influence pigmentation. Strains impaired in T9SS e.g., ΔporT lack pigmentation which is never restored. Due to the absence of A-LPS in the P. gingivalis HG66 strain all gingipains and other T9SS cargo proteins are not associated with the cell membrane, but secreted into extracellular milieu resulting in white phenotype. (B) Single colonies of P. gingivalis strains grown for 7 days showing black or white pigmentation.
T9SS components.
| PG_RS04080 | PG0928 | PGN_1019 | PorX; chemotaxis protein CheY, cytoplasmic protein | 60.6 | PorY | Tanf_12330 | Sato et al., | |
| PG_RS00240 | PG0052 | PGN_2001 | PorY; sensor histidine kinase, inner membrane protein | 44.6 | PorX | Tanf_13050 | ||
| PG_RS01295 | PG0289 | PGN_1675 | PorL, inner membrane protein | 34.8 | PorM | Tanf_02365 | Sato et al., | |
| PG_RS01300 | PG0290 | PGN_1674 | PorM, inner membrane protein | 56.4 | PorL/K/N | Tanf_02370 | Sato et al., | |
| PG_RS01305 | PG0291 | PGN_1673 | PorN | 41.3 | PorP | Tanf_02375 | Sato et al., | |
| PG_RS01290 | PG0288 | PGN_1676 | PorK; lipoprotein | 54.1 | PorN | Tanf_02360 | Sato et al., | |
| PG_RS08590 | PG1947 | PGN_1877 | PorW; lipoprotein | 132.1 | n.d. | Tanf_00060 | Sato et al., | |
| PG_RS04660 | PG1058 | PGN_1296 | Lipoprotein; TPRd, WD40d, CRDd, OmpA Family domain | 74.9 | n.d. | Tanf_02260 | Heath et al., | |
| PG_RS03550 | PG0809 | PGN_0832 | Sov; β-barrel protein | 281.1 | n.d. | Tanf_04410 | Saiki and Konishi, | |
| PG_RS02670 | PG0602 | PGN_0645 | PorQ; β-barrel protein | 37.9 | n.d. | Tanf_12465 | Sato et al., | |
| PG_RS01285 | PG0287 | PGN_1677 | PorP; β-barrel protein | 35.0 | PorN/K | Tanf_02355 | Sato et al., | |
| PG_RS03295 | PG0751 | PGN_0778 | PorT; β-barrel protein | 26.7 | n.d. | Tanf_10520 | Sato et al., | |
| PG_RS00125 | PG0027 | PGN_0023 | PorV (LptO); β-barrel protein | 43.1 | PorU | Tanf_04220 | Ishiguro et al., | |
| PG_RS00870 | PG0189 | PGN_0297 | β-barrel protein | 25.6 | PorK/N | Tanf_09815 | Gorasia et al., | |
| PG_RS02385 | PG0534 | PGN_1437 | TonB-dependent receptor; β-barrel protein | 92.3 | n.d. | Tanf_07980 | Saiki and Konishi, | |
| PG_RS00885 | PG0192 | PGN_300 | Omp17; OmpH-like | 19.6 | n.d. | Tanf_09800 | Taguchi et al., | |
| PG_RS00120 | PG0026 | PGN_0022 | PorU; surface C-terminal signal peptidase | 128.2 | PorV (LptO) | Tanf_02580 | Sato et al., | |
| PG_RS07070 | PG1604 | PGN_0509 | PorZ; surface B-propeller protein | 83.6 | n.d. | Tanf_12435 | Glew et al., | |
Calculated from amino acid sequence including a signal peptide.
In vitro experiments.
In vivo experiments.
References to original papers pertinent only to P. gingivalis T9SS. Proteomic papers are not cited in the table but they are referred in the text.
Not determined.
F. johnsoniae possesses 5 proteins homologous to PG1058, the one with the highest score is given in the table. All 5 F. johnsoniae proteins (Fjoh_1647, Fjoh_4540, Fjoh_3950, Fjoh_3973, Fjoh_3476) range between 26–29% identities with 90-98% coverage comparing to PG1058 (assessed by NCBI BLAST).
Accession number given in the table is for the Sov protein from P. gingivalis ATCC33277 due to miss-annotation in W83 genome as two separate ORFs (PG0809/PG0810; Saiki and Konishi, .
F. johnsoniae possesses numerous homologous proteins to PG0287 (PorP), the one with the highest score is given in the table. Five proteins with the highest overall score (Fjoh_3477, Fjoh_3951, Fjoh_1646, Fjoh_4539, Fjoh_2274) range between 25–29% identities with 86–93% coverage and gaps 3–9% comparing to PG0287 (PorP). The most explored PorP-like protein of F. johnsoniae is Fjoh_0978 (SprF; Rhodes et al., .
The closest homolog in F. johnsoniae proteome is Fjoh_1689 is much larger protein than its equivalent in P. gingivalis (341 residues vs. 174; 32% identities, 95% PG0192 coverage assessed by NCBI BLAST).
Figure 2Arrangement of . Genes are grouped according to in silico operon predictions, reflecting direction of transcripts (Dam et al., 2007; Mao et al., 2009; Pertea et al., 2009; Taboada et al., 2012). Gaps in the genome are indicated by the slashes. Intervals between adjacent genes or overlapping regions (in base pairs-bp) are marked below each section. Each transcription unit is shown in different color. Genes encoding T9SS components are depicted in red font. Black vertical arrow shows continuous region (75 bp) between PG0026 (porU) and PG0027 (porV) but the two genes were predicted to transcribe independently. Green arrows indicate operons that were confirmed experimentally (Taguchi et al., 2015; Vincent et al., 2017). Green asterisk denotes proved single transcription unit for the PG0191-PG0192-PG0193 genes (in P. gingivalis ATCC33277 strain), however co-transcription of preceding the PG0190 gene (17 bp interval) was not investigated (Taguchi et al., 2015). The PG0809 (Sov) gene was re-sequenced and confirmed to consist of the two combined genes PG0809 and PG0810, mis-annotated in W83 genome as separate ORFs (Saiki and Konishi, 2007). A dashed arrow denotes indirect evidence that PG0809 (Sov) and PG0811 may be co-transcribed. It was shown that sigma factor SigP (regulator of other por genes) binds to the region preceding PG0811 but not the one before PG0809 (Kadowaki et al., 2016).
T9SS cargo proteins.
| PG_RS00120 | PG0026 | PGN_0022 | PorU; surface C-terminal sortase | Glew et al., | |
| PG_RS00835 | PG0182 | PGN_0291 | Mfa5; VWA domain-containing protein [von Willebrand factor (vWF) type A domain] | Hasegawa et al., | |
| PG_RS00840 | PG0183 | no PGN | Hypothetical protein containing VWA domain identical to that in PG0182 (circa 430 residues); lipoprotein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS01060 | PG0232 | PGN_0335 | CPG70; zinc carboxypeptidase | Veith et al., | |
| PG_RS01560 | PG0350 | PGN_1611 | Internalin; hypothetical protein; leucine-rich repeats (x8) | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS01820 | PG0410 | no PGN | Hypothetical gingipain-like peptidase C25 | ||
| PG_RS01825 | PG0411 | PGN_1556 | T9SS C-terminal target domain-containing protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS02195 | PG0495 | PGN_1476 | T9SS C-terminal target domain-containing protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS02240 | PG0506 | PGN_1466 | RgpB; arginine specific gingipain B, cysteine protease | Pike et al., | |
| PG_RS02455 | PG0553 | PGN_1416 | PepK; lysine specific serine endopeptidase | Sato et al., | |
| PG_RS02700 | PG0611 | PGN_0654 | Hypothetical protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS02710 | PG0614 | PGN_0657 | Hypothetical protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS02720 | PG0616 | PGN_0659 | HBP35 (hemin binding protein 35) | Shoji et al., | |
| PG_RS02765 | PG0626 | no PGN | T9SS C-terminal target domain-containing protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS02890 | PG0654 | PGN_0693 | T9SS C-terminal target domain-containing protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS03370 | PG0769 | PGN_0795 | Fibronectin; hypothetical protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS03450 | PG0787 | PGN_0810 | T9SS C-terminal target domain-containing protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS04535 | PG1030 | PGN_1321 | T9SS C-terminal target domain-containing protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS05835 | PG1326 | PGN_1115 | Hemagglutinin | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS06055 | PG1374 | PGN_0852 | T9SS C-terminal target domain-containing protein, leucine-rich repeats (x7) | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS06255 | PG1424 | PGN_0898 | PPAD; peptidylarginine deiminase | Sato et al., | |
| PG_RS06260 | PG1427 | PGN_0900 | Periodontain; peptidase C10; PrtT-related | Nelson et al., | |
| PG_RS06835 | PG1548 | PGN_0561 | PrtT; cystein protease (domain peptidase C10) | Madden et al., | |
| PG_RS07070 | PG1604 | PGN_0509 | PorZ; surface B-propeller protein | Lasica et al., | |
| PG_RS07920 | PG1795 | PGN_1770 | Hypothetical protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS07930 | PG1798 | PGN_1767 | T9SS C-terminal target domain-containing protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS08090 | PG1837 | PGN_1733 | HagA (hemagglutinin A, 8 HA domains) | Shi et al., | |
| PG_RS08105 | PG1844 | PGN_1728 | Kgp; lysine specific gingipain, cysteine protease | Pike et al., | |
| PG_RS08700 | PG1969 | no PGN | T9SS C-terminal target domain-containing protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS08940 | PG2024 | PGN_1970 | RgpA; arginine specific gingipain A; cysteine protease | Pike et al., | |
| PG_RS09310 | PG2100 | no PGN | T9SS C-terminal target domain-containing protein; TapC | Kondo et al., | |
| PG_RS09320 | PG2102 | PGN_0152 | T9SS C-terminal target domain-containing protein; TapA | Kondo et al., | |
| PG_RS09640 | PG2172 | PGN_0123 | Hypothetical protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS09755 | PG2198 | PGN_2065 | Hypothetical protein; peptidase | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| PG_RS09850 | PG2216 | PGN_2080 | Hypothetical protein | Found only by proteomic analysis | |
| Tanf_03370 | TfsA (surface layer protein A), classical CTD | Tomek et al., | |||
| Tanf_03375 | TfsB (surface layer protein B), classical CTD | Tomek et al., | |||
| Tanf_04820 | BspA, cell surface antigen, leucine rich protein, classical CTD | Veith et al., | |||
| Tanf_06225 | Forsilysin, metalloprotease, KLIKK-type CTD | Narita et al., | |||
| Tanf_00450 | Mirolysin, metalloprotease, KLIKK-type CTD | Karim et al., | |||
| Tanf_06550 | Karilysin, metalloprotease, KLIKK-type CTD | Karim et al., | |||
| Tanf_00440 | Mirolase, serine protease, KLIKK-type CTD | Karim et al., | |||
| Tanf_09450, Tanf_06530 (not merged in one contig) | Miropsin-1, serine protease, KLIKK-type CTD | Ksiazek et al., | |||
| Tanf_06530 | Miropsin-2, serine protease KLIKK-type CTD | Narita et al., | |||
| Fjoh_4555 | ChiA, chitinase | Rhodes et al., | |||
| Fjoh_0979 | SprB, surface adhesin, necessary for gliding motility | Rhodes et al., | |||
| Fjoh_0808 | RemA, mobile surface adhesin, necessary for gliding motility | Shrivastava et al., | |||
All P. gingivalis cargo proteins excluding PG0410 (no PGN) and PG1548 (PGN_0561) were originally found by Veith et al. (.
PG0769 (PGN_0795) processing is unclear. Protein is devoid of N-terminal cleavage signal for periplasm transport (searched with SignalP and LipoP servers) as well as T9SS CTD domain.
PG0787 (PGN_0810) is a very small peptide (80 aa) devoid of N-terminal cleavage signal for periplasm transport (searched in SignalP and LipoP servers), however its last 66 aa constitute a classical T9SS CTD domain.
PG1969 processing is unclear. Protein is devoid of N-terminal cleavage signal for periplasm transport (searched with SignalP and LipoP servers) but contains T9SS CTD domain.
Proteins listed are the best studied among other identified T9SS cargos of F. johnsoniae. For more information please see Kharade and McBride (.
Figure 3Hypothetical model of the structure and function of . The overall translocon structure and the protein(s) forming a pore in the OM (outer membrane) have not yet been characterized. Therefore, it is shown as a background blue shape accommodating known components. Interacting proteins are situated in close proximity. OM β-barrel proteins are depicted as pentagons. PorZ is presently the only T9SS protein with the known atomic structure. The mode of its association with the translocon is not yet defined. PorK, PorW, and PG1058 are lipoproteins anchored into the inner surface of the OM. PG0192 protein precise localization and possible interactions are not known. A T9SS cargo protein is equipped with two sorting signals: N-terminal signal peptide (SP) directing the protein to the general secretion system SecYEG and conserved C-terminal domain (CTD) recognized by T9SS. After translocation through the IM (inner membrane) most proteins acquire their proper fold in the periplasm. Next, CTD directs the protein for further translocation across the OM through T9SS. Finally, CTD is cleaved off by PorU sortase and a secreted protein is modified by attachment of A-LPS resulting in the anchorage of cargo protein to the cell surface. Two component system PorX/PorY and sigma factor SigP have regulatory effect on por genes. Although, they are not physical elements of T9SS, PorX was shown in vitro to interact with PorL.